DId you take her rectal temperature? If she is acting normal, and not pregnant (99 is a normal rectal temp for a dog about to have puppies!), then I suspect a problem with your thermometer. Unless you have an ear thermometer made for dogs, and know how to use it (which is not that easy; dogs have much longer ear canals than humans and the thermometer has to "see" the ear drum.

Rebeccavet :

So if you don't have a dog ear thermometer, you have to hold a rectal thermometer inside the anus about 1/2 to 1 once, for about 30 seconds.

If it was not in far enough, it would beep but give you a lower than normal reading. That happens to me at the office every day with wiggly puppies that won't let me hold the thermometer in far enough the whole time, and I get falsely low temps.

Rebeccavet :

I would try it again, holding it in a little farther. If you were just inside the anus, you did not get an accurate reading. If anything, with the symptoms you describe, I would expect a higher than normal reading.

Rebeccavet :

Low temps of 99 usually mean a dog is about to have puppies (not your problem), is in kidney failure, or is severely dehyrated for some other reason than kidney disease.

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I don't think any of these are Reese's problem.

Rebeccavet :

If she is eating, drinking, and playful, she may just have an allergy, or a mild "cold".

JACUSTOMER-cefi4321- :

is there anyother things i should look for

Rebeccavet :

Thick discharge from the nose, bloody discharge from the nose, not eating would be reasons to call Reese's veterinarian.

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Vomiting or diarrhea that does not clear up on its on in a day or so.

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Any more questions for me?

JACUSTOMER-cefi4321- :

no

Rebeccavet :

If I can answer anything else at all, let me know.

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